As you pass by farm fields this autumn season, you may wonder why farmers are planting again, even though the harvest has ...
Backyard Garden Lover on MSN
16 Best Winter Cover Crops to Boost Your Soil's Vitality
As your vegetable garden winds down for the season, it can be tempting to simply let it rest until spring. But what if you ...
House Digest on MSN
Plant This Winter Ground Cover Crop In Fall For Healthier Garden Soil Come Spring
Winter conditions can make soil compact, eroded, or nutrient-poor. Growing this unassuming member of the legume family will help you avoid these gardening woes.
For an Earth-friendly garden, keep a succession of plants in the soil by planting cover crops. These are plants grown to improve the soil rather than for harvest. I prepare the soil for the next year ...
When the Southern Cover Crops Council held its annual conference recently in Baton Rouge, I was fortunate to sit in on panel discussions with farmers and specialty crops (vegetables, fruits, nuts and ...
Put your garden to work over winter by planting a cover crop this fall. Covering the soil with plants that are turned into the soil or smothered and allowed to decompose in spring provides many ...
If you want to promote higher populations of beneficial insects, cull your buckwheat crops within 20 days of flowering. If ...
Tender-stemmed dill grows best in cool weather, but can be damaged by frosts and freezes. Cover smaller plants with a ...
While farmers plant millions acres of plants like rye and clover to boost soil health and crowd out weeds, a cover crop does the same thing in the smallest home garden. With cover crops, a vegetable ...
Maybe after you finish your vegetable harvest, you mentally say, “I’m done this year,” and wait to start again next year. But a cover crop could benefit you in several ways. By researching now, you ...
A few weeks ago a reader and a friend from the pool who lives near Loudonville asked me if a person could leave his cereal rye in the field this season. I said I’m not sure, but I’ll find out if that ...
Your garden has done a great job of feeding you this season, why not return the favor? Instead of leaving the ground open over the winter, consider planting a cover crop, also known as green manure.
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